China

Civil Aviation

In 1987 China's civil aviation system was operated by the
General Administration of Civil Aviation of China (CAAC). By 1987
China had more than 229,000 kilometers of domestic air routes and
more than 94,000 kilometers of international air routes. The more
than 9 million passengers and 102,000 tons of freight traffic
represented a 40 percent growth over the previous year. The air
fleet consisted of about 175 aircraft and smaller turboprop
transports. CAAC had 274 air routes, including 33 international
flights to 28 cities in 23 countries, such as Tokyo, Osaka,
Nagasaki, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, London, Paris,
Frankfurt, East Berlin, Zurich, Moscow, Istanbul, Manila, Bangkok,
Singapore, Sydney, and Hong Kong. Almost 200 domestic air routes
connected such major cities as Beijing, Shanghai, Tianjin,
Guangzhou, Hangzhou, Kunming, Chengdu, and Xi'an, as well as a
number of smaller cities. The government had bilateral air service
agreements with more than 40 countries and working relations with
approximately 386 foreign airline companies. CAAC also provided air
service for agriculture, forestry, communications, and scientific
research.

The staff of CAAC was estimated at approximately 50,000 in the
1980s. The administration operated three training colleges to
educate future airline personnel. In a bid to improve CAAC's
services, more ticket offices were opened in major cities for
domestic and international flights.

In the mid-1980s regional airlines began operations under the
general aegis of CAAC. Wuhan Airlines, run by the Wuhan municipal
authorities, started scheduled passenger flights to Hubei, Hunan,
Guangdong, and Sichuan provinces in May 1986. Xizang also planned
to set up its own airline to fly to Kathmandu and Hong Kong.

In the 1980s the central government increased its investment in
airport construction, and some local governments also granted
special funds for such projects. Lhasa Airport in Xizang, Jiamusi
Airport in Heilongjiang Province, and Kashi and Yining airports in
Xinjiang-Uygur Autonomous Region were expanded, and new airports
were under construction in Xi'an, Luoyang, and Shenzhen. An
investment of -Y500 million was planned for expanding runways and
building new terminals and other airport facilities. In 1986 China
had more than ninety civilian airports, of which eight could
accommodate Boeing 747s and thirty-two could accommodate Boeing
737s and Tridents.